/>
musicOMH
home | features | albums | tracks | live | classical | blog
Facebook Twitter
search:

Iron Maiden - The Final Frontier

(EMI) UK release date: 16 August 2010
4 stars
by Sam Shepherd
Iron Maiden - The Final Frontier

buy Iron Maiden MP3s or CDs

Spotify Iron Maiden on Spotify

Is this it? The Final Frontier, Iron Maiden's 15th album, is a milestone with significance. Main man Steve Harris once proclaimed that Maiden's mission statement was to complete 15 albums and then call it a day. Recent interviews suggest that this comment was possibly tongue in cheek. But what if this is it? Is The Final Frontier a suitable parting shot for Iron Maiden?

The album starts in unfamiliar fashion with Satellite 15... The Final Frontier, a song in two parts. Initially it's almost experimental with rumbling bass sounding like the last few seconds of a Space Invaders game.�Rumbling tribal drums thunder with industrial intent, while the guitars squall and thrum. It's only Bruce Dickinson's wail that points to this being a Maiden album. The second half returns to familiar territory with thuggish power chords and technical solos ripping forth. Thematically, the story of a space explorer lost in the unknown is not unlike David Bowie's Space Oddity but it also evokes the spirit of Maiden's own Somewhere In Time album.

Indeed there is a retrospective feel to the album. Recent single El Dorado is introduced with a barrage of guitars that seems to feature the deconstructed riff from 1986's Wasted Years. Elsewhere there are nods to the Seventh Son Of A Seventh Son and Powerslave eras in particular, with reworked riffs and themes. It's not that the band have run out of ideas, rather that they're toying with their history and indulging in a little time travel of their own.

Initially things are kept fairly tight; the gallop of Mother Of Mercy rumbles along in typical fashion as Dickinson explores the horrors of war in bombastic style. The Alchemist's short but sweet blast recalls a time when Maiden were still quick to get to the point, and is all the better for it. Coming Home is an early highlight, mixing balladry with straight up rock chops - guitarist Adrian Smith's pop nous coming to the fore. A possible rumination on the recent world tour documented in the film Flight 666, the chorus soars as high as its homesick protagonist, the words "coming home, when I see the runways lights" ache with sincerity.

However, Maiden's songs have been expanding of late. A 13 minute saga was once an oddity; now lengthy epics are the norm. The second half of the album features five songs that stretch way beyond the seven minute mark. They appear to be little more than a conglomerate of riffs at first but, with time, they become clearer and there doesn't seem to be an ounce of fat on any of them - with the exception of the rather poor Starblind. The complexities of Isle Of Avalon are thrilling, The Talisman's time shifting riffs and salty sea-dog tale hark back to The Rime Of The Ancient Mariner, while the slow burn of The Man Of Who Would Be King reveals more about itself with every listen.

Closing the album is the genuinely affecting When The Wild Wind Blows, whose narrative borrows from Raymond Briggs' stunning animated film of the same name, about an elderly couple surviving a nuclear event. Despite the usual roar, its roots lie in traditional folk and, with its talk of having a cup of tea whilst waiting for the end of days, it's a very English Apocalypse. It closes with winds blowing across a landscape scorched by a white-hot blast. If this is to be Maiden's swansong then that's a fitting image with which to depart. However, the sheer quantity and quality of ideas displayed on The Final Frontier suggests that there are more frontiers to be explored by Iron Maiden yet.

Comments

related articles
ALBUM: Iron Maiden - From Fear To Eternity: The Best Of 1990-2010
ALBUM: Iron Maiden - The Final Frontier
ALBUM: Iron Maiden - Somewhere Back In Time: The Best Of (1980-89)
ALBUM: Iron Maiden - Dance Of Death
ALBUM: Iron Maiden - Rock In Rio
GIG: Iron Maiden @ Earl's Court, London
MUSIC DVD: Iron Maiden - The History Of Iron Maiden: The Early Years
TRACK: Iron Maiden - Different World
TRACK: Iron Maiden - The Reincarnation Of Benjamin Breeg
TRACK: Iron Maiden - The Trooper
TRACK: Iron Maiden - The Number of the Beast
TRACK: Iron Maiden - No More Lies
TRACK: Iron Maiden - Rainmaker
TRACK: Iron Maiden - Wildest Dreams
TRACK: Iron Maiden - Run To The Hills
coming soon
Shearwater - Animal Joy Young Magic - Melt Demi Lovato - Unbroken Xiu Xiu - Always
recent releases
Mark Lanegan Band - Blues Funeral Lindstrøm - Six Cups Of Rebel Blondes - Blondes John Talabot - fIN
The Twilight Sad - No One Can Ever Know Maverick Sabre - Lonely Are The Brave Cloud Nothings - Attack On Memory Beth Jeans Houghton - Yours Truly, Cellophane Nose
Leonard Cohen - Old Ideas Lana Del Rey - Born To Die Portico Quartet - Portico Quartet Errors - Have Some Faith In Magic
Django Django - Django Django The 2 Bears - Be Strong Darren Hayman - January Songs Barry Adamson - I Will Set You Free
First Aid Kit - The Lion's Roar Pulled Apart By Horses - Tough Love DJ Food - The Search Engine Chairlift - Something
Kathleen Edwards - Voyageur Leila - U&I Gonjasufi - MU.ZZ.LE Alog - Unemployment
albums out this week
Gotye - Making Mirrors Field Music - Plumb Tennis - Young & Old Emeli Sandé - Our Version Of Events
Ital - Hive Mind Speech Debelle - Freedom Of Speech Earth - Angels Of Darkness, Demons Of Light II Maribel - Reveries
recommended
Field Music
INTERVIEW
Field Music

David Brewis on the band's latest album Plumb and side projects.
Errors
Q&A
Errors

Steev Livingstone on unexpected tweets and Mogwai connections.
latest album reviews
    1. NZCA/LINES - NZCA/LINES
    2. Lambchop - Mr M
    3. Anthony Reynolds - Life's Too Long: Songs 1995-2011
    4. Memoryhouse - The Slideshow Effect
    5. Earth - Angels Of Darkness, Demons Of Light II
    6. Boy & Bear - Moonfire
    7. Phantom Limb - The Pines
    8. The Rosie Taylor Project - Twin Beds
    9. Speech Debelle - Freedom Of Speech
    10. Maribel - Reveries
    11. Boy Friend - Egyptian Wrinkle
    12. Icarus - Fake Fish Distribution
    13. Air - Le Voyage Dans La Lune
    14. Tennis - Young & Old
    15. David's Lyre - Picture Of Our Youth
    16. Band Of Skulls - Sweet Sour
    17. Field Music - Plumb
    18. Xiu Xiu - Always
    19. Demi Lovato - Unbroken
    20. Hooray For Earth - True Loves
    21. Farrar, Johnson, Parker & Yames - New Multitudes
    22. Shearwater - Animal Joy
    23. Young Magic - Melt
    24. Paul McCartney - Kisses On The Bottom
    25. Of Montreal - Paralytic Stalks
    26. Sharon Van Etten - Tramp
    27. We Have Band - Ternion
    28. Pet Shop Boys - Format
    29. The Megaphonic Thrift - The Megaphonic Thrift
    30. Blondes - Blondes
    31. Lindstrøm - Six Cups Of Rebel
    32. Mark Lanegan Band - Blues Funeral
    33. John Talabot - fIN
    34. Matthew Bourne - Montauk Variations
    35. James Levy & The Blood Red Rose - Pray To Be Free

    36. more album reviews